Homeless People Sold In Fukushima To Clean Up Radiation VIDEO

The night is cold here in Sendai, far to the north of Tokyo. This station's the warmest place to sleep for people living rough. It's also a fertile recruiting ground.

The night is cold here in Sendai, far to the north of Tokyo. This station's the warmest place to sleep for people living rough. It's also a fertile recruiting ground.

Brokers are selling homeless people like this to companies cleaning up radiation in Fukushima.

57-year-old homeless man, Shizuya Nishiyama's been sleeping rough for a year, and he's twice been sent to scrub down radioactive hotspots.

"We're an easy target for recruiters. We turn up here with all our bags, wheeling them around and around the station and we're easy to spot. Then they say to us: 'Are you looking for work? Are you hungry?'” Nishiyama told British news agency Reuters.

Activists say homeless people are flocking here from across Japan to look for work in the tsunami-devastated north. But the safer jobs are now in short-supply.

Yasuhiro Aoki is leader of this homeless support group.

Many workers are reaching their radiation limits, he says, so there's a shortage - and the homeless are being used to fill in the gaps. There are no figures for the number of homeless people cleaning up Fukushima.

Government rules don't require checks on the lowest tier of companies supplying workers.

"I don't ask any questions, that's not my job. I just find people and send them to work. I send them and get money in exchange. That's it. I don't get involved in what happens after that," according to one of Sendai's labour brokers, Seiji Sasa.

Back at Sendai station, radiation is the last thing on Nishiyama's mind.